Mandela, Obama And The Post-Racial Age

MANDELA, OBAMA AND THE POST-RACIAL AGE
Prof. Ali A. Mazrui

Daily Monitor
October 18, 2008
Uganda

Nelson Mandela and Barack Obama are potential icons of a post-racial
age which is unfolding before our eyes. Mandela has become the most
respected Black man by all races in world history.

Obama stands a chance of becoming the most trusted Black man in US
history. No African-American has ever come so close to winning the
US presidency. But no African-American could have approached so close
to winning the US presidency without an unprecedented level of trust
from a sizable part of the white electorate.

A major cause of the Mandela-Obama respective successes lies in
their embodying a short memory of racial hatred, and their impressive
readiness to forgive historical adversaries. They have both illustrated
a remarkable capacity to transcend historical racial divides.

Cultures differ in hate retention. Some nurse their grievances for
generations. Others are intensely hostile in the midst of a conflict,
but as soon thereafter, they display a readiness to forgive, even
if not always to forget. The Armenians, Irish and Jews fall in this
category.

Armenians were butchered in large numbers by the Ottoman Turks in
1915 – 1916. This story of the Armenian martyrdom of World War I has
been transmitted with passion from generation to generation.

Armenians are still demanding justice from Turkey nearly a hundred
years after the massacres. Similarly, the Irish have long memories
of grievance. Clashes occur in Northern Ireland virtually every
year concerning marches that commemorate ‘Orange Conflicts’ in the
seventeenth century. Jews also have strong collective memories of
the Holocaust and other outbursts of European anti-Semitism.

Mandela came from a culture illustrative of Africa’s short memory of
hate. That culture is far from being pacifist. Wars and inter-ethnic
conflicts have been part of Africa’s experience before European
colonization and decades after independence.

What is different about African cultures is relatively low level
of hate retention. Obama’s tolerance may be due to personal
multi-culturalism. He had a white American mother, a Black Kenyan
father, and an Indonesian step-father.

His cultural ancestry includes Luo culture, Islam and Black American
Christianity. Mandela’s life passed through stages. His early
days as a nationalist were characterized by a belief in non-violent
resistance. In a sense, he carried the torch of South Africa’s Albert
Luthuli and Mahatma Gandhi. Sharpeville was a major blow to his belief
in passive resistance.

By the time that Mandela was having afternoon tea with the unrepentant
widow of the founder of apartheid, Hendrick Verwoerd, he had tough
acts to follow in African magnanimity. There were precedents of
forgiveness that he followed and improved upon.

Post-colonial Africa had produced other instances of short memory of
hate. Kenya’s Jomo Kenyatta, once condemned by a British colonialist
as a "leader of darkness and death" was unjustly imprisoned in a
remote part of the country.

When he finally emerged from prison on the eve of independence, he
proclaimed "suffering without bitterness." He proceeded to transform
Kenya into a staunchly pro-Western country.

In November 1965, colonial Southern Rhodesia’s Ian Smith launched
his Unilateral Declaration of Independence from Britain, unleashing
a bitter Zimbabwe civil war. Yet, he lived to sit in a parliament of
Black-ruled Zimbabwe and was not subjected to postwar vendetta. Again,
Africa’s short memory of hate at work. In the late 1960s, Nigeria waged
a highly publicized civil war that cost nearly a million lives. The
Federal side won that war but was uniquely magnanimous towards the
defeated Biafrans. Yet, another manifestation of Africa’s short memory
of hatred.

For his part, when Mandela was finally released from prison in
1990, this most illustrious of all Africa’s liberation fighters
embarked on a mission of healing and forgiving. This former hero of
mobilization leadership became a paragon of the reconciliation style
of leadership. He became the greatest of all African examples of
prolonged reconciliation, an exemplar of African short memory of hate.

Obama illustrated his post-racial tolerance by denouncing his firebrand
pastor, Jeremiah Wright, and leaving his own radicalized church. Obama
is more of an ideological liberal than a moral Gandhian. Indeed,
Obama is less of a Gandhian than Martin Luther King, Jr. was. But in
their different ways, Mandela, Obama and King have all been part of
the search for a post-racial age.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Emil Lazarian

“I should like to see any power of the world destroy this race, this small tribe of unimportant people, whose wars have all been fought and lost, whose structures have crumbled, literature is unread, music is unheard, and prayers are no more answered. Go ahead, destroy Armenia . See if you can do it. Send them into the desert without bread or water. Burn their homes and churches. Then see if they will not laugh, sing and pray again. For when two of them meet anywhere in the world, see if they will not create a New Armenia.” - WS